Still Alchemy

When Feelings Become “Facts”: Understanding Emotional Reasoning


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Emotionally immature people often rely on emotional reasoning—the belief that if they feel something, it must be true. Instead of seeing emotions as internal signals, they treat them as evidence about reality. If they feel rejected, they assume rejection is happening. If they feel criticized, they believe they’re under attack. If they feel anxious, they take it as proof that something bad is about to occur.

While emotions are always real, they are not always accurate. Feelings can be shaped by anxiety, fear, insecurity, or past experiences, which can distort how situations are interpreted. Emotionally mature individuals recognize this and pause to question their reactions. They ask themselves: “Is this based on facts or feelings? Do I know this is true? Could there be another explanation?”

Emotionally immature individuals often skip this step. They jump straight from feeling to conclusion, building narratives based on assumptions rather than evidence. Neutral situations can become negative interpretations—a simple boundary feels like rejection, or someone being busy feels like abandonment.

These misinterpretations often lead to strong reactions that create real conflict. Ironically, the resulting tension is then used as “proof” that their original belief was correct, reinforcing a cycle where emotions distort reality and reactions confirm those distortions.

Trying to argue with logic rarely works in these situations because the issue isn’t information—it’s emotional dysregulation. A more effective approach is to acknowledge feelings without validating false conclusions. Stay calm, grounded in facts, and avoid over-explaining or taking responsibility for assumptions.

Healthy boundaries are essential. You cannot force someone to separate feelings from reality, but you can choose not to engage in distorted narratives. Emotional maturity lies in recognizing that feelings inform us—but they don’t define the truth.

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Still AlchemyBy Still Alchemy